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Denver, David Carle Further Commitment to Future Excellence of Pioneers Hockey

Story Links DENVER – University of Denver Athletics announced today that men’s hockey coach David Carle has signed a multi-year contract extension, furthering his commitment to the program’s success in the near and long-term future.   At the helm of the program for the past seven seasons, Carle has led […]

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DENVER – University of Denver Athletics announced today that men’s hockey coach David Carle has signed a multi-year contract extension, furthering his commitment to the program’s success in the near and long-term future.
 
At the helm of the program for the past seven seasons, Carle has led the Pioneers to 179-74-17 overall record and his career .694 winning percentage is presently the highest all-time among DU hockey coaches. He guided Denver to the 2022 and 2024 National Championships and four NCAA Frozen Four appearances (2019, 2022, 2024, 2025), joining Murray Armstrong as the only Denver coaches to reach the national semifinal four times in a six-year stretch (no tournament in 2020). 
 
“I am honored to have the University’s support for our hockey program over the last seven years and into the future,” said Richard and Kitzia Goodman Denver Hockey Head Coach David Carle. “Without their support and the support of our fans, alumni and donors, nothing that we have accomplished would have been possible. The resources we have established have had a direct impact on the daily lives of current and future Pioneer hockey student-athletes, and we continue to raise the bar for success with these commitments. 
 
“I am grateful for Chancellor Jeremy Haefner, Chairman John Miller as well as the entire Board of Trustees and Vice Chancellor of Athletics Josh Berlo for their continued support of and investment in Denver hockey to ensure we maintain our position as the best college program in the country. I’m looking forward to continuing to work with our student-athletes, coaches, administration, alumni, supporters and fans over the coming seasons. Denver is home for me and my family.” 
 
The Denver hockey program continues to be resourced at a high level with support from Athletic and University administration and in large part due to record philanthropy and increased revenues. Over the last several years, elevated support for the program include enhanced team travel, full Alston Award benefits for student-athletes, expansion of and investment in the coaching staff, as well as new lighting, seats, boards and glass at Magness Arena to improve the fan experience. 
 
“We are thrilled to have David continue to lead the exceptional legacy that is Denver hockey,” said Josh Berlo, Denver Vice Chancellor for Athletics and Ritchie Center Operations. “His dedication and passion are second to none, and we look forward to furthering our partnership and building upon our NCAA-record 10 national championships as the most accomplished college hockey program all-time. The Carle family commitment, along with the support of our university leadership, students, alumni, donors, season-ticket holders and fans, empowers the program to continue to chase competitive and academic excellence year in and year out.” 
 
Along with the extension, Carle is also committing to a multi-year major gift pledge to support current and new initiatives within the hockey program. Carle will be the first Denver Athletics head coach to join the department’s Gold Standard Society. His gift will directly support the Murray Armstrong Hockey Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund and the Athletics Excellence Fund.
 
“Our program is tremendously grateful for the support we have received from our fans, alumni and donors. In today’s changing college athletic landscape, we are grateful for philanthropy and season-ticket holder support more than ever to help our program stay at the highest level,” says Carle. “The legacy of Denver hockey wouldn’t be where it is without the foundation laid by coach Murray Armstrong. My family and I are honored to support the Murray Armstrong Fund and become members of the Gold Standard Society with the signing of this agreement. I would invite others to honor Murray’s legacy and support current and future initiatives of Pioneer Hockey at a time when it is as crucial as ever.” 
 
To make a gift in honor of Coach Carle’s continued commitment to DU Hockey, click here. To learn more about the Murray Armstrong Hockey Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund or Gold Standard Society, contact Kacie Dohrmann, Denver Deputy Athletic Director for Development. 
 
The support by the university, fans, alumni, and donors has led to an unrivalled level of success since the turn of the century. With their 10 national championships being the most all-time, the Pioneers have won five titles, reached eight Frozen Fours, have 19 NCAA Tournament appearances and 623 total victories since 1999-00.
 
Denver hockey has won at least 20 games in each of the last 23 full seasons, the longest active streak in the NCAA and extending their school-record “Tenzer Streak.” Over the last four years, Denver has won 30 or more games—the longest such stretch in program history and the longest since Michigan in the 1990s (1990-1998)—to go along with their three Frozen Four berths and two national championships in that time.
 
Carle’s 179 wins rank fourth in Denver hockey history, and he is three away from tying Ralph Backstrom for third place on the program’s all-time list. The Pioneers have reached the NCAA Tournament in each of the five full seasons with Carle leading the bench, with DU posting a 12-3 record in national tournament outings and making it to four Frozen Fours. Carle owns an 83-49-11 mark in National Collegiate Hockey Conference play and helped DU capture the 2022 and 2023 Penrose Cup as regular-season champions and the 2024 Frozen Faceoff Trophy as conference tournament champions.
 
Since 2018-19, Carle and the Pioneers own a perfect 7-0-0 record against Big Ten Conference programs and have an 18-7-1 mark against opponents from the Hockey East Association. Against NCAA “Power Four” schools, Denver has a 21-6-1 record in those matchups.
 
The Anchorage, Alaska, native became the fourth-youngest coach in history to win a D-I national title in 2022 (32 years, 5 months, 0 days) and is the youngest ever to win two national championships following the Pioneers’ NCAA-record 10th victory in 2024 (34 years, 5 months, 4 days). He is the 20th coach in NCAA history to win multiple national championships and was the first to do so since Scott Sandelin of Minnesota Duluth (2011, 2018, 2019).
 
This past season in 2024-25, Carle and the Pioneers went 31-12-1 and reached the NCAA Frozen Four for the second-straight year after opening the campaign with wins in each of its first 12 games—the best start in program history. The season-opening stretch was part of an overall 21-game winning streak that dated back to March 9, 2024 and went through Nov. 16, 2024—the longest across multiple seasons in school history and one shy of tying the longest overall winning streak at Denver (22, Jan. 5-March 16, 1968).
 
In addition to his responsibilities at DU, Carle has guided the United States National Junior Team in each of the past two years and helped the Americans win consecutive gold medals at the 2024 and 2025 IIHF World Junior Championships. It was the first time that Team USA had won consecutive World Junior Championships and marked the sixth and seventh titles in the country’s history. Carle is the only U.S. coach to win multiple World Juniors, and he and Marshall Johnston in 1977 are the only Denver bench bosses to lead Team USA at the World Junior Championship.
 
Named the ninth Denver hockey head coach in program history on May 25, 2018, Carle was 28 years old at the time of his hire and was youngest head coach in NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey. He first joined DU as a student assistant coach from 2008-2012 and later served four and a half seasons as a full-time assistant coach under Jim Montgomery (2014-2018), reaching two Frozen Fours and winning the 2017 national championship.
 
The University of Denver men’s ice hockey head coach is an endowed position by Richard and Kitzia Goodman. It was the first of five head coaching positions at Denver to be endowed (others include men’s lacrosse, men’s soccer, women’s gymnastics and alpine skiing).

 



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Olivia Dunne supports LSU baseball at College World Series | LSU

Dunne pulled up in a creative custom jersey with LSU on the front and a Pittsburgh Pirates Paul Skenes’ No. 30 jersey on the back. Olivia DunneIG Stories pic.twitter.com/HoHNzx2ADJ — JumpTrailers (@JumpTrailers) June 15, 2025 Dunne also posted a photo on her Instagram story that showed she bought some Jell-O shots to help LSU fans […]

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Dunne pulled up in a creative custom jersey with LSU on the front and a Pittsburgh Pirates Paul Skenes’ No. 30 jersey on the back.

Dunne also posted a photo on her Instagram story that showed she bought some Jell-O shots to help LSU fans keep the lead in the Jell-O shots challenge at Rocco’s. As of the last social media update, LSU fans have bought 8,808 Jell-O shots, almost twice as much as the second-place fanbase of Murray State at 4,208 shots.





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Hogs Lose College World Series Opener against Tigers

OMAHA, Neb. – Gabe Gaeckle struck out a career-high 10 batters over a career-long six innings of relief work, but Arkansas (48-14) could not overcome an early deficit and was handed a 4-1 loss against LSU (49-15) Saturday night at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in its College World Series opener. The Tigers jumped out to […]

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OMAHA, Neb. – Gabe Gaeckle struck out a career-high 10 batters over a career-long six innings of relief work, but Arkansas (48-14) could not overcome an early deficit and was handed a 4-1 loss against LSU (49-15) Saturday night at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in its College World Series opener.

The Tigers jumped out to a 3-0 lead before Gaeckle entered in relief of starter Zach Root with the bases loaded in the second inning. The right-hander induced an inning-ending groundout and would go on to tally 10 strikeouts while allowing only one run on three hits in his superb relief effort.

Reese Robinett swatted a solo shot, his third home run of the season, to lead off the bottom of the sixth, cutting Arkansas’ deficit to 3-1. It was the Razorbacks’ only run of the night, however, as Tiger ace Kade Anderson fired seven innings of one-run ball with seven strikeouts.

Arkansas was limited to just four hits, including singles by Wehiwa Aloy, Cam Kozeal and Charles Davalan, and a pair of walks. Kozeal, a native of Omaha, Neb., led off the eighth with his single and advanced to second on a wild pitch, but the offense was unable to capitalize. 

Up next, Arkansas will play Murray State (44-16) in an elimination game at 1 p.m. Monday, June 16, on ESPN.

For complete coverage of Arkansas baseball, follow the Hogs on Twitter (@RazorbackBSB), Instagram (@RazorbackBSB) and Facebook (Arkansas Razorback Baseball).





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Should Oilers Start Calvin Pickard For Game 5 Stream of National Hockey League

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State College Juneteenth celebration | Penn State, State College News

Despite the rain, the State College community gathered downtown Saturday for a block party celebrating Juneteenth with music, dance, cultural traditions and powerful reflections. Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when the last enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas, learned they were free — more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation.  The theme was “Juneteenth: […]

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Despite the rain, the State College community gathered downtown Saturday for a block party celebrating Juneteenth with music, dance, cultural traditions and powerful reflections.

Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when the last enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas, learned they were free — more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. 

The theme was “Juneteenth: Our Freedom, Our Fight, Our Future,” which shaped the spirit of the day through performances, speakers and community engagement.

“Liberty without equality is unfinished,” Chiluvya Zulu, the diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging director for the Borough of State College, said. “Our future is being written right now by the leaders, the artists, the activists, the educators and the children in this very crowd.”

The celebration began at noon with a performance by the Marching Cobras, a high-energy band from New York that set the tone for the day. 

Attendees were then welcomed by Charles Dumas, award-winning actor, director and Penn State professor emeritus, who encouraged the crowd to reflect on the importance of freedom and unity.

Following him, Jacinta Garcia, Native and Indigenous community coordinator at Penn State, delivered a moving Ganonyok Thanksgiving Address, acknowledging the land, creator, labor and all elements of creation. 







Juneteenth Block Party, flowers and flag

Flowers and a flag sit on a table during the annual Juneteenth Block Party on Saturday, June 14, 2025 in State College, Pa.




 

A central feature of the celebration was the Juneteenth art exhibition curated by Dr. Grace Hampton, professor emerita of art at Penn State. 

The gallery featured works that reflected themes of freedom, ancestry and collective memory. 

“Art tells the stories that history books often forget,” Hampton said. “For me, curating this exhibit was about honoring the struggles and triumphs of our people and giving visual life to the spirit of Juneteenth.”

Hampton, who traveled to Ghana with a group that set up outdoor health clinics for over 18 years, sees art and service as intertwined forms of community healing.

“Juneteenth is about remembrance, but also about vision — about remembering how we have changed, evolved and how we are growing and learning every day,” she said. “It’s an honor to be here and to help in remembering how we resist and rebuild across generations.”

Also present was a sense of global connection, as Dr. Hampton highlighted her community’s annual mission to Ghana. 

“Each year we choose a different region, set up a clinic, and try to serve as many people as possible,” she said. “It’s our way of continuing the legacy of service beyond borders, we like to come here and openly narrate those stories too.”

The celebration included performances by local poets and a music set by Gabby Samone, an emerging pop-R&B artist from Baltimore. 

At 3:45 p.m., the crowd swayed to the soulful rhythms of Brencore MOTOWN, a band from Washington, D.C.







Juneteenth Block Party, Gabby Samone

Gabby Samone, an American Idol contestant, performs onstage during the annual Juneteenth Block Party on Saturday, June 14, 2025 in State College, Pa.




 

One vendor, Yasoda Mensah, traveled from Port Royal to participate in the event. Her business, Trifolia, sells natural products made with herbs and offers “a connection to the values of restoration and education.” 

“We’re here to support the whole idea of Juneteenth,” Mensah said. “This celebration is proof that the spirit is still strong. The ancestors are still with us, and events like this show that their fight, their presence and their power haven’t disappeared — they live on in us.” 

Attendees danced to performances by Urban Fusion, Izuba, Natalia Velazquez and Home Planet before concluding the celebration. 

“I’ve never felt a community moment quite like this,” Eric Ian Farmer, one of the performers, said. “Rain or shine, we showed up for each other — and that’s what Juneteenth is about.” 

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Americans across the country took to their city streets Saturday to participate in the “No K…

 

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Stanley Cup Final 2025 Game 5 live updates: Panthers vs. Oilers highlights and analysis

The Oilers are looking for their fifth multi-goal comeback win of the postseason and the third of the Stanley Cup Final. If they pull it off, they would tie the NHL record for both marks, both of which are held by the 1987 Flyers. A win tonight would also give the Oilers back-to-back multi-goal comeback […]

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The Oilers are looking for their fifth multi-goal comeback win of the postseason and the third of the Stanley Cup Final. If they pull it off, they would tie the NHL record for both marks, both of which are held by the 1987 Flyers.

A win tonight would also give the Oilers back-to-back multi-goal comeback victories. Only three teams in all of history have managed to pull off that feat: Kings in 2014, Flyers in 1987 and Red Wings in 1950.



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Milner gets Brighton extension for 24th season with a Premier League record in sight

Associated Press BRIGHTON, England (AP) — James Milner will get another chance to become the player with the most appearances in the Premier League era. The 39-year-old midfielder, who is 15 appearances short of Gareth Barry’s record (653), has signed a one-year contract extension with Brighton. Milner sustained a serious knee injury that limited him […]

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Associated Press

BRIGHTON, England (AP) — James Milner will get another chance to become the player with the most appearances in the Premier League era.

The 39-year-old midfielder, who is 15 appearances short of Gareth Barry’s record (653), has signed a one-year contract extension with Brighton.

Milner sustained a serious knee injury that limited him to just four league games last season. He made his 638th appearance on the last day of the season, coming off the bench in a 4-1 victory over Tottenham.

“Last season he wasn’t able to help the team on the pitch as much as he would have liked, but around the squad his experience is invaluable, especially for the younger players,” Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler said in the team’s announcement Friday.

“He’s a great guy to have in our environment, who is always there for me and the team,” said Hurzeler, who is seven years younger than Milner. “I’m looking forward to working with him again.”

Milner, who will turn 40 in January, made his debut at age 16 for Leeds in November 2002.

He’s entering his record-extending 24th season overall and third at Brighton — he made 15 league appearances in the 2023-24 season — after eight years at Liverpool. Milner has also played for Manchester City, Aston Villa and Newcastle.

Milner made 61 international appearances for England from 2009-16.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer




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